Three killed in central Mali roadside bomb blast

A regional government official was travelling in a military convoy in the volatile centre of the country when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb, killing him.

Tuareg Malian soldiers under the command of Colonel El Hadj Ag Gamou patrol a street in Gao February 11 2013.
Reuters

Tuareg Malian soldiers under the command of Colonel El Hadj Ag Gamou patrol a street in Gao February 11 2013.

Three people, including a government official, were killed Thursday in a roadside bomb attack in central Mali, the government said, as fresh violence hits the war-torn West African state.

A regional government official was travelling in a military convoy in the volatile centre of the country when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb, killing him.

Two others also died in the attack, an official from Mali's territorial administration ministry said, without specifying whether they were soldiers.

Mali is struggling to contain an insurgency that erupted in 2012, and which has claimed thousands of military and civilian lives since.

Despite the presence of thousands of French and UN troops, the conflict has engulfed the centre of the country, and spread to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

Laying roadside bombs is a favoured tactic of militants active in the Sahel.

Also known as improvised explosive devices, they kill and maim scores of victims every year in Mali.

MINUSMA, the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali, warned of deteriorating security in the centre of the country on Thursday.

Joanne Adamson, the UN's deputy special representative in Mali, told reporters that there had been "an increase in inter-community clashes, but also attacks against the population by armed extremist elements."

Central Mali has become the epicentre of violence in the vast semi-arid country, where ethnically motivated killings and militant attacks are now common.

Militants killed some 70 people between March 1 and April 3, Adamson said, according to a transcript of her statement to reporters.

The UN has stopped running internal flights in Mali for two weeks, she added, as part of measures to curb Covid-19.

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